C-band airwaves in the 3.7GHz-3.98GHz range can interfere with altimeter readings in commercial cockpits
T-Mobile says its 2.5GHz mid-band spectrum has better coverage than Verizon and AT&T’s C-band signals
T-Mobile and Verizon each say that their mid-band spectrum provides better coverage
Not everyone believes that the airlines should be able to force changes to how the carriers use their C-band spectrum. Preston Padden, principal of Boulder Thinking and an official with the now-defunct C-Band Alliance, said, “The proposal by the aviation community to codify the voluntary and temporary restrictions on C-band usage graciously indulged by AT&T and Verizon is the most outrageous proposition I have seen in 50 years of following FCC matters.
Padden, who filed with the FCC under his own name and not for an organization or company, stated that “The FCC must just say ‘no’.”
T-Mobile says that its 2.5GHz mid-band spectrum offers more coverage than C-band spectrum while Verizon says the opposite. Either way, it is important to understand that the C-band airwaves can interfere with commercial flight while the 2.5GHz mid-band spectrum does not. And that alone could give T-Mobile an advantage in areas near airports used by commercial airlines.